Bladderwrack in the climatic stress

environmentclimate changemarine ecosystemsmarine biologyocean research
Healthy bladderwrack, (c) Uli Kunz

Fucus vesiculosus (Bladderwrack) shows coupled reactions to environmental changes Short-term heat waves, long-term warming and acidification, increasing over-fertilization and oxygen depletion - marine ecosystems are subject to many changes. The reactions of marine organisms to these factors are also diverse. Biologists from the GEOMAR Helmholtz Center for Ocean Research Kiel have now been able to prove to a large algae that their response to different environmental changes can be coupled positively and negatively - leading to an acceleration or slowing down their adaptation. The stress on marine ecosystems is increasing. The warming of the oceans, the sinking of the pH value of the seawater, the supply of nutrients and the loss of oxygen sets them to. Individual factors for certain species can certainly be an advantage. Other changes can also severely limit the habitat of the same species. The different effects make it very difficult to estimate future shifts in biodiversity. "One of the central questions is whether the reactions to different changes are positively or negatively related or whether they occur independently of each other," says Prof. Dr. med. Martin Wahl, marine biologist at GEOMAR. Biologists from GEOMAR and the University of Rostock have now published a study in the journal Scientific Reports, which shows for the first time that adaptations to several genetic alterations are linked to one key species in coastal ecosystems, the bladder wrack Fucus vesiculosus. "This can both accelerate and block bladder response to changes," explains Professor Wahl, lead author of the study. Fucus vesiculosus is a brown algae that lives on hard surfaces along the coasts of the North Atlantic and in the North and Baltic Seas. Like other algae, it plays an important role in the binding of carbon in the sea. It also forms the basis of ecosystem on the respective shorelines. In the Baltic Sea, but also in its other distribution areas, the stocks of Fucus vesiculosus since the beginning of the 21st Century have fallen sharply. The exact reasons for this have not yet been finally clarified. For their study, the researchers used a special test facility, Kiel Outdoor Benthocosms (KOB). It consists of a total of twelve experimental chambers in which coastal ecosystems can be simulated on a small scale. Thanks to complex control technology, several environmental parameters can be manipulated. As the KOBs are located on a pontoon in Kiel's inner fjord and are directly supplied with water from the fjord, the environmental conditions within the experimental reservoirs come very close to nature. In the experimental chambers, over a period of 12 months, the team exposed genetically distinct families of bladder wraps to elevated carbon dioxide conditions, resulting in lower pH levels in the water, heat phases, increased nutrient input, and periods of low oxygen levels. The reactions to the different changes were clearly linked. For example, families tolerating lower pH levels could tolerate warming and higher nutrient levels - and vice versa. At the same time, these families were much more susceptible to oxygen depletion. "In nature, this could mean that a bladderwrack population that has adapted to over-fertilization and summer heat is particularly badly damaged or completely destroyed in the autumn by buoyancy of oxygen-free water from deep," explains Martin Wahl. Overall, the team has not only found the first evidence that responses to various symptoms of global change can be coupled. "The study also shows that in the future we will still need research that studies the responses of organisms to multiple environmental or temporally offset environmental changes. Otherwise it will be difficult to make reliable statements about the future development of ecosystems in the sea", explains Professor Wahl.

Sick bladderwrack, (c) Uli Kunz

이 기사는 자동 번역되었으며 약간의 오류가 포함될 수 있습니다. 의심스러운 점이 있으면 원문 영어 버전을 참조하십시오.

Adam-Moore
How to Become a Professional Diver with Purpose: Turning Passion into Impact
AI KB

목적을 가진 프로페셔널 다이버가 되는 방법: 열정을 임팩트로 전환하기

이 단계별 가이드를 통해 프로페셔널 다이버가 되는 방법을 알아보세요. 다이빙을 목적 중심의 직업으로 전환하는 데 필요한 트레이닝 경로, 커리어 옵션, 스킬을 살펴보세요.

2 일 전
predrag-vuckovic
Frenzel Equalization Explained: What It Is and How It Works
AI KB

프렌젤 압력 평형 설명: 프렌젤 이퀄라이제이션의 정의와 작동 방식

프렌젤 이퀄라이제이션이 무엇인지, 어떻게 작동하는지, 그리고 프리다이버 (Freediver)가 이 테크닉을 사용하여 수중에서 효율적으로 압력 평형을 맞추고 귀를 보호하는 이유를 알아보세요.

6 일 전
Coral-olga-ga-unsplash
How Grenada's Underwater Art Park Is Supporting Coral Recovery
AI KB

그레나다의 수중 아트 파크가 산호 회복을 지원하는 방법

그레나다의 수중 예술이 산호초 복원에 어떻게 도움이 되고 있는지 살펴보세요. 인공 산호초 프로젝트와 다이버들에게 왜 중요한지, 그리고 어떻게 참여할 수 있는지 알아보세요.

9 일 전
jakob-owens-unsplash
World Shootout Marks 20 Years with Image of the Two Decades
AI KB

월드 슛아웃 20주년을 기념하는 지난 20년간의 이미지

주요 일정, 심사 과정, 수중 사진이 다이빙을 어떻게 형성하는지 등 월드 슛아웃의 지난 20년간의 이미지에 대해 알아보세요.

12 일 전
Andi-Cross
How to Become a Diver with No Experience: Step-by-Step Guide
AI KB

경험이 없는 다이버가 되는 방법: 단계별 가이드

이 명확한 단계별 가이드를 통해 다이버가 되는 방법을 알아보세요. 스쿠버 다이빙을 자신 있게 시작하기 위한 트레이닝, 필수 장비, 실용적인 팁을 알아보세요.

15 일 전